red bed
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- affected by oxidation
- In geologic history of Earth: Formation of the secondary atmosphere
…diagenesis to give rise to red beds (sandstones that are predominantly red in colour due to fully oxidized iron coating individual grains) and that 2.2 billion years passed before a large number of life-forms could evolve. An idea formulated by the American paleontologist Preston Cloud has been widely accepted as…
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- In geologic history of Earth: Formation of the secondary atmosphere
presence in
- Permian System
- In Permian Period: Basin sedimentation
…increase in eolian (wind-transported) sands, red beds, and evaporites. Many intracratonic basins—such as the Anadarko, Delaware, and Midland basins in the western United States; the Zechstein Basin of northwestern Europe; and the Kazan Basin of eastern Europe—show similar general changes. In most basins the inner parts became sites of
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- In Permian Period: Basin sedimentation
- Triassic System
- In Triassic Period: Continental deposits
Continental sediments dominated by red beds (that is, sandstones and shales of red colour) and evaporites accumulated on land throughout the Triassic Period. The Bunter and the Keuper Marl of Germany and the New Red Sandstone of Britain are examples of such red beds north of Tethys, while to…
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- In Triassic Period: Continental deposits